277. Part 2 of our
interview with Shirah Dedman. Shirah made a
documentary
Uprooted,
about the lynching of her great-grandfather Thomas William
Miles, Sr. in Shreveport in 1912. Racist violence was so severe
in Shreveport that the parish earned the nickname, "Bloody Caddo."
Shirah is an activist,
filmmaker, and attorney. From a high school dropout at
15-years-old to a licensed lawyer by the age of 23, she
inexplicably found herself consistently un- and under-employed.
So after her last layoff, she decided to relentlessly pursue her
true passion: the intersection between media, economics, race
and the environment.Last year, Shirah was featured the Equal
Justice Initiative and Google produced short film
Uprooted,
documenting her family's return to the site of her
great-grandfather's lynching. She also released
You a Nomad,
a short documentary about the displacement of Oakland's black
population.
- This week in Louisiana history. September 8, 1954. Ruby
Bridges was born in Tylertown, Mississippi before moving with
parents to New Orleans at the age of four.
- This week in New Orleans history. On Thursday, September 8,
2005, President Bush issued an executive order suspending the
Davis-Bacon Act of 1931, allowing federal contractors
rebuilding after Katrina to pay below the prevailing wage.
- This week in Louisiana.
2018
Alligator Festival
West Bank Bridge Park
St. Charles Parish
I-310 Exit 7
13825 River Road
Luling, LA 70070
Please join us for the Annual Alligator Festival at the
Westbank Bridge Park in St Charles Parish. The festival is our
main fundraiser and helps us fund college scholarships for
local youth. Play with baby alligators, shop the arts and
crafts mall, enjoy cajun cuisine and exciting carnival rides,
and listen to great live music all weekend long! Come join us
and pass a good time!
- Bruce listens to the Patti Rambin Band at Coney Island
Riverside in Monroe, LA.
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